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Jehovah’s Witnesses Introduction ................................................................................................................................................................... 1 Beliefs, Teachings, Wisdom and Authority ....................................................................................................................... 2 Basic Beliefs ........................................................................................................................................................................... 2 Scriptures ............................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Founder and Successors ........................................................................................................................................................ 3 Structure and Authority ........................................................................................................................................................ 4 Membership Figures.............................................................................................................................................................. 5 Ways of Living ................................................................................................................................................................ 5 Guidance for Life ................................................................................................................................................................... 5 Religious/Ritual Practice........................................................................................................................................................ 5 The Journey of Life (life cycle) ............................................................................................................................................... 6 Holy Days and Celebrations................................................................................................................................................... 7 Ways of Expressing Meaning ........................................................................................................................................... 7 Stories of Faith....................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Symbols of Faith .................................................................................................................................................................... 7 Places of Worship and Architecture ...................................................................................................................................... 7 Prayer .................................................................................................................................................................................... 8 Pilgrimage .............................................................................................................................................................................. 8 Expression and Worship ........................................................................................................................................................ 8 Art, Music, Drama and Creativity .......................................................................................................................................... 9 Identity, Diversity and Belonging ..................................................................................................................................... 9 Religious Identity ................................................................................................................................................................... 9 Family and Community........................................................................................................................................................ 10 Diversity ............................................................................................................................................................................... 11 Religious Freedom and Persecution .................................................................................................................................... 11 Meaning, Purpose and Truth ..........................................................................................................................................12 Religious Experience ............................................................................................................................................................ 12 Answers to Ultimate Questions .......................................................................................................................................... 12 Religion and Science ............................................................................................................................................................ 13 Values and Commitments ..............................................................................................................................................14 Individual and Social Responsibility .................................................................................................................................... 14 Moral Issues ........................................................................................................................................................................ 14 Rules and Ethical Guidelines ............................................................................................................................................... 15 The Environment ................................................................................................................................................................. 17 Websites .......................................................................................................................................................................17 Bibliography ..................................................................................................................................................................17 Introduction Jehovah's Witnesses are the followers of a Christian-based religion perhaps best known for their ‘door-to-door’ evangelising activities. It is a millennialist religion, with followers believing that we are living in the last days and that Armageddon is fast 1 approaching. Jehovah’s Witnesses are also known for their refusal of blood transfusions; for not voting or bearing arms; and for not celebrating Christmas, Easter or their own birthdays. In 2017, there were just over 8.4 million Jehovah’s Witnesses in 240 ‘lands and territories’ worldwide. Jehovah’s Witnesses have two main legally incorporated institutions in the USA: The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, and The Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc. Other affiliated institutions include International Bible Students Association in Britain, Association les Témoins de Jéhovah in France, and Jehovas Zeugen in Deutschland in Germany. The names Jehovah’s Witnesses and Watchtower Society are sometimes used interchangeably but in this profile the term Jehovah’s Witnesses will be used. We are indebted to Professor Eileen Barker, Founder and Director of INFORM (the Information Network on Religious Movements) and her team of researchers, for providing this new material in response to requests from RE teachers and pupils. INFORM can be contacted via www.inform.ac The resources contained in the list of subjects are a basic introduction to the facts and beliefs of Jehovah’s Witnesses. Beliefs, Teachings, Wisdom and Authority Basic Beliefs Jehovah’s Witnesses are a millennial, restorationist and nontrinitarian Christian movement with roots in 19th century America. They believe in God, whom they refer to as Jehovah, and the complete Bible (the Old and New Testaments which they call the ‘Hebrew-Aramaic Scriptures’ and the ‘Christian Greek Scriptures’) as his ‘inspired message’. Jesus is believed to be the Son of God and the saviour but not part of a Trinity. The name, Jehovah’s Witnesses, adopted in 1931, is said to identify both their God and their mission – in Isaiah 43:10-12 God says ‘you are my witnesses.’ Religious scholars have tended to see the Jehovah’s Witnesses as a millennial religious organisation with roots in the Adventist movement. The Adventist movement developed from the teachings of an American Baptist minister, William Miller, who claimed that Jesus Christ would return to Earth in 1843. When this event failed to materialise, his followers revised the date to October 1844. When this date also passed (in what has been termed the 'Great Disappointment'), different groups emerged under various leaders who explained the failed prophecy in different ways. The Seventh-day Adventists, perhaps the best known of the Adventist groups, grew out of the teachings of one such leader, Ellen G. White. White claimed that rather than returning to Earth on the expected date in 1844, Jesus had, instead, moved into the heavenly sanctuary in order to prepare for his return. Charles Taze Russell (1852-1916) led a Bible study group in the Adventist tradition, although he claimed never to have been an Adventist (Chryssides